wffif! "ICti -H.V3KW 87 'il'..-? wmf- zmvOTs LA, THl 1 aililil i a r&zmmr VlW-WfWv.T-ftS .' . " I MAN'S WAY By RUBY M. AYRES totAer 0 "7A Fnrtmn HunUr," "A Bacheler Hutband," (c. (Copvrleht, HH, hu VfhceUt Newtpaccr Hvndlcaf) ,i 1? THIS BBOINS TIU6 TOB k CSdtcflrd Sv itrupelt upward. He fA ESS tMi Mellu. DanatrMi. repe- t.C!i Wi ffreuiiac. fitfcrcMc Mm. rz'tf daphler 01 a inrtncis. ' -- flniifiian. wne no S!iaenHeman. who hat a Inrer "i.7i I tmnrf.ii nr n iajmmt "ir."i -v." --. ntarei lieti - .. niim 1 if net SwS"' SS&S.'Aif'K tf timtalely bj Harden. Iter AjAtrij nrrt fimtiMfl Wt&tJ?lUird?nV Zhi'e Kind, te a jmeIWM merrfja pi "- awi- WfkT.'fl bVf levr-ll ."CM remrc a iiilre Ittfrlm IMUh avina that her huiband th" vn MEHE IT CONTINUES CfTARDEN bad loved Llllth loved jH v.. .tin rtevnml that fact. alie I'MA ece nothing, realise nething: but u ... there before her mind like a W'i .rrt yHe had married her for some reason Wei his own. net in the leant because he i;Sfd for her: net in the least because W had wished te have her for his own. I r .i.. niih1 hnr nrm. if .'."" r.r:: v..:; -;vi.si,i i ,, iShe looked up with wild eyes. . V"I want te go home; let me go home. ' I. can't stay with you. I must go mi tarn hnrrlcned. He frowned. ' "You're talking nonsense," he snld Mu'ihlr.' "Please remember that you ''ate W wife. I will talk te you direct ly, rieaie be sensible." But Melly was past reasoning with. ghe realised that it was net no much the telegram as his reception et it that bid reused the slumbering suspicion in her heart. She followed him into the ketel mechanically. She steed by In 1 tie big lounge while a porter brought 'in their luggage. Then Harden spoke ''igatn, and she found herself moving with him across me aau unu up mc A smiling maid met them. She looked at. Melly interestedly. Melly wondered if " one knew that they were newly 5- married. She glanced down at lrer ring. It teemed te nang jikc a wcigac en uci She went ever te the window of the t6em into which she had been shown 1 and looked out into the street. It wu a quiet, ugly street with rows of houses that ull looked nlikc ; their high reefs ' shut out most of the sky and gnve everything a dreary aspect. Harden came into the room behind ber. He closed the deer and followed ler te tba window. ' - "Mellv." he becan. She turned. He fctts looking et her Hnxleusly. "Well!" he said with a smile. " Whnt nm I te ' 'say te be forgiven? What can I de te .coeUnce jeu that there is nothing t,u .very terrible in my life after nllV" ; The banter of his voice hurt her. She understood new tbnt he had nlways treated her as a child, never as u wom an 1 She bad grown very wise during the last hour. ' Fer a moment she did net answer, then suddenly she found her voice. "If Mr. Fernald had died n month age, ou would never have married me, 'would jeu?" she said. The het bleed rushed te his face ; his tjres fell. .Melly turned away and groped for n ehatr. She felt as if seme one had struck her., She dropped into the chnir and hid her face en her arm. She looked . a forlorn llttle bride sitting there in ' the wedding finery of which she had been se proud. Harden walked n step away and came hick. "Melly." he said gently. He knelt down beside her, and tried te make her leek up. "Listen, Melly, and I'll tell you the whole truth. I should have told ?ou some da imvwnv. It's only 'that jeu will henr It a little soeuer." He took the band .that lay in licr lap ; the hand Hint were his very new rlnc. . "I knew Mrs. Fcrnnld years uge be fere she wa'i married! I lie we were engaged just for n little while, a few months. I was a peer man then, Melly net rich enough te buy her nil the frocks and pretty things she wanted j and te se she threw me ever." He Hopped, and for seme moments there was sllcucc. Then he began once mere. "I never saw her from the day she jent me nwny (111 I met her with you Ib Llttle Helpten, when 5011 were look ing ever tlm lieiiHc next jeurs. Yeu must !mc seen that the meeting was net a happy one for me." Melly made u llttle convulsive move ment. She knew hlie had been blind miserably blind net te have guessed then. "Meeting her like that," Harden went 011 with difficulty, "reopened nil old sores. I I Btippose 1 cared for her mere thun she ever carrd for nic: Many mte, when I taw her ngaln, I new that I -had never really for rotten. Melly'H hand was 'tern suddenly from ". She (lftf, her head and looked athltu with wild eyes. 'And 011 never cared for me: you Juet made use of me. Oh, why didn't I tnctit Why didn't I guessV" CHAPTER XXV The Beginning of a New Life Melly pushed him nwny when he would have touched her: she rose te her net and t)Cgnn pacing the room. I suppose I couldn't ejpect you te "illy care for inc after her," she said sp ngly "i kuew I'm net pretty like v.i . 1 !i VJW ,ll(lt wc aren't aren't 55?..' Tll wer(ltl ""no with little J,' 1 ' " between them. She wrung nor bunds In anguish. !.,,rilcn ,took 1'er by the shoulders. rJnTe, '"'J ?" -,l? 'ruth, hoping that eafe for uV. 1- , , V1 V" I But. ytL',..", " '";c fifiyins. it. Obe C0II d llel lirnnL- iiuuv fr,M 1,1, . ' 1 ""ii.. 1 hHl'iir in vnu 01 tl... ,.. .i I.... . -. - ... . . . .- " .."... ii.in lim . " " u,r "rn'l "wny with n alvnl f uWet, PlMleii. He had dutf nfCl ". tl,n,t. f1,p ,mi1 hu much tan - -11 " . "; ! wiiju lie, InTh V!l?pf, ?f. th'' PMlonate woman and lnttl0 8lrl Ue b0(I E0 JiBbtly wecl ili,lJipw' J?.1', bnen' T ,lke'l' y"." yeuZ .OI,'rSOb.binBV V1 bunPS0 X ,(,t H,n..LV ".-,. -,u" imeu me - .-ev t, v,( iiiiru iiii inn. 1 dlrltM U"' ' (1,1 thlnk "0 I dld-l ve!rrV,,,i' u &?,,, ""en sharply. Her 8? SiiiSt,ii?trbw forward bcli' Sun. l!!Ld.l,,eribnck !'! ,be bP cI""'" nml &n,i "Window wide. He bathed her ad hlmsei; us he loekpd at her white hcr,(fr!!"d W hfr (Iint lie taking lreflivVhb.n,l0W,N lnte wnaUIne, and ftS& stdew! l'r0Ugbt "Cr ,U, ,be bH knpw. t'"Jt he had been unuttcr- hC.,Jly...,,,?,,Kl't only of himself; that he u EV,n,B.Klrl te protect himself -"ins 00 for another woman. It fu.wrcu nis imin'n wv ce.i n -1.1 i " . WU: "" l,ttU saerl- lie hud sacri 'tiriu'' iJur :v"m up .uiu net care 7nd 1 imm efL". eman wbe" b0 JiSi,ff"b bl,,.(whel? heart. Jf ' i ..(I ' irtnd v."" W Kibiit remt Wlti Frtrnaia, u teyign f VLIhed known Miirrtcn n the unci. Du ' U married another .tnan who waa hew izSilv "Ml, MeW . fetjfcr dire Mi&icnfv iP'ETM "income with him.- Marine Kn fcJSlltf nnl(9 Ofld.iellh e htilBltf. W&k'&p'u Iff f riaiiii rainiiBi v "i "'j-' wandered ever him vaguely: then she laughed feebly and tried te rnlse her self. Harden npoke quickly. "It8 .all right! Lle Mill! Yeu fainted I" Hut she paid no attention te him, She snt with her hands clasped in her lap, a leek of such utter misery en her face that he was struck te the heart. ' "Well?" she said Bhnklly. "Well? What arc you going te de with me?" The childishness et the qhcstlen hurt him. ' He would rather; she had -raved .and cried. "I suppose," she said. "I suppose you wen't.Tct 1110 go home?" He breke out agitatedly. , "I can't. Melly: hew can I? Think what people wetild fcny ! De you want tbcm nil tnlking down nt Llttle Help Help ten? I'll make everything as easy for you us I cnn. Yeu shall de just whnt you like. We'U travel. Yeu shall de anything you wish. I'm a rich man. Yeu can have what money you want if you'll try te forgive me?" He was surprised at bin anxiety' for ber forgiveness. He knew that until he had wen it he would never lese this sense of shame nnd self-contempt. He felt an if he had brutally ill-treated a child incapable of defending itself. She shook her head. "I don't want te go abroad. I don't rare where we go. If you think we had better stny here. 1 don't mind." She spread her hand1 with 11 gesture of helplessness. "Anyway," she said, "I'm glad I knew!" Her voice broke, but she controlled it instantly. She looked up nt- him, nnd the ghost of a wnllc curved her Ilns. "Hew you must have hated it nllr' she said. "Belli,, engaged te me and today!" He breke out in vehement denial. "It's net fnlr te say that. It's net true. I nm proud and plcnsed that jeu should should think enough of me te wish te marry me." "Hut but you don't love me at nil?" she added for him painfully, ns he stepped. lie tried te say mat 110 did, nun te make her believe it: but he knew that his voice rang insincere. He knew that she did net believe him that she never would believe him again. There was a tragic silence. Then Melly laughed ; the saddest little laugh imaginable. "Well." she said, "it's a geed thing you're rich enough te be able te keep a way from me when jeu want te. Why why, we needn't even even live In the Mflme house unless we like." Hu flushed. "Yeu are trying te hurt me". Yeu arc doing nil j-eu can te make me feel what fl cad I've been. MeUv, if you'd try te meet me half wny ! we've been f;oed friends you told me ence you'd Ike me for n friend. Can't we stnrt from that and make something of our lives?" She shook her head. "Ne," she said. "Ne, I'm afraid I can't de that." -All her tendcrest hopes nnd dreams were down "in the dust, and out of their ruins this mini whom she loved hew well she never knew till new was .-ntmly nsking her te turn her romance Inte friendhhip ! And down in Little Helpten Alec Fernald lay dead ! The barrier that had kept Jehn from the woman he loved waR no longer there. Llllth was free! It was Jehn new who was tied. She could net bear it ! A wild long ing te get nway, te be nlene, seized her. She felt ns if she would burst out sob bing if she stnjcd nnether moment. She turned blindly te the deer. Harden followed He prevented her from turning the handle. He began pleading with her. "Yeu must tersive me! This is our wedding day, Melly. You're net going te be angry with me today. I'll de anything in mv power te make you happy. Mrn. Fernald will never come into either of our lives. I swear te you that I will never see her any mere. She went out of my life tedaj', when I married you, Melly!" She shivered nwny from him. ' "I suppose I suppose I've get te slay with you," she said. "Se se we cnn just pretend te he nil right. If that s what jeu want. Ill I'll stay here. And nnd " Her voice trailed away, only te go en aguln passionately. "Oh, I wish I'd never seen you. I wish I could go back and find m self at home again just Mellv Dangcrlleld !" "Yeu mean thnt j-eu won't forgive me. Melly. I beg of jeu " He put his arms nreund her. "Kiss me, Melly." Melly covered her face with her hands. He wns treating her like a child ; he did net yet understand that she with a woman with a woman's breaking heart. "Leave me nlene, eh, leave me alone," she said wildly. be breke nway from him, nnd left him standing there alone in the bllent room. CHAPTER XXVI A Daring Step After thnt night, though they lived In the same house, Melly nnd her hus band weie nlmntt strangers. She never nsked Harden whnt he did, or hew he spent his time, nnd she ncer gave him nuy dctniK of her own life. Befere they had been home a week, people wcre tnlking; they bad known all nleng that the marriage would be a failure, se they declared ; what could ene expect when n man married such an unsophisticated girl? Ne doubt he had wearied of ber befere thp cud of their brief honeymoon; probably ber en tlrn family were continually sponging en him. They felt themselves particularly ag grieved because there had Jecn se little entertaining dene by the newly married pair; the Little Helptenltcs would have given a great deal for n chance te be nblc te poke nreund. nnd see whnt sort of n home Melly had; they would like te novo been given tee opportunity te see hew she played hostess, and inci dentally the opportunity te criticize and sneer : it was preposterous, they said thnt such a rich man should de nethlni for the vlllnce "Mr. Harden has done n great deal for the village," se Mrs. Ashford pro tested when such things were said in her hearing. "Ueenuse he does things un ostentatiously it mukes it all the better; nobody has any idcu of the way he hns helped the peer of the village." Her defense of him was met with silence ; the peer of the vlllnge bad net been in their neighbors' thought at the moment. "Anjhew," Heme ene declared after a moment, "Mrs. Harden might te meke herself mere ugreenble; hhc isits no body, and I'm sure we all called after her murriugc," Mrs, Ashford thought it was quite obvious why Melly had net returned these calls; every ene hud Miubbed her when her nnme was Dangertield, and she knew Melly well enough te under stand that she was glorying in her new position, und the fact that new she had it in her power te snub them in return. "And the wny she gees about every where with that jeung Wharten is 11 positive scandal!" se some ene else protested. "She really ought te be spoken te about it; uury one is talk ing." Mrs. Ashford hud noticed Melly's friendship for her hus-hiind's young secretary, and bceu a little disturbed ubeut itt but she was net geiug te dls cum it with these iweplt. rr.7nr.i y ; ,v THE GVMfiSTlng-a-Ling! Lingt.Ung! Met - yt urcu wt t we worn- ) tier ion -- 'he v VWf N SM ,AttE WIH J AND'ttW '.UKfe "TO, WAV! HOU ( UTtLC PllVtfr TXC CfTMett rJl6Mr- Til aij A V CAU th? wSHWt eMOUt O'CLOCK 1 lUpHT CUTT'Nt", Ut A ' V I e V!7 -'. VVt'Rti 60IN6 W WWCE AN I UYTlt W-M'ftUMINftM Vl"' AllKl! A 'tirVr "' 1WH VIU VMl A iVNCHtOM- fa I Mt AN O0& wtft4 VOV MM- Ml l V ' ,,V J J I P7 Vev4vx fvaevrr & cevpia- , J ) that chack about -ajwhrc t't , V v - f )' , ,itr .jlfM ( 1 tO -PAHCC AU. THOSE M ,' T U ll, i ".' i .- iS"' ' A Hi K? 'MS WAI Wt- U0V.P THC WIE A J W5l U 1 ' , W iiilf P-VmSI l Miwetf-"I'tu cAUMte-'Xeu Jm , I Jlmm w ' jllj -4 ? I Mm ' 8M V cak tAivt-re her veuttpyTr. lIIHli u SOMEBODY'S STENOG Tet j?id of that r ViHW DOSi' ITS LU TN ITk A 1 meud DArai MOM seajseJ The Yeung Lady Acress the Way t? The young lady across the way seys tJicM really isn't any renseu why a girl and n young man can'L be just geed friends without the slightest sylleglbm ubeut it. PETEYAt Palm Beach Mil GASOLINE ALLEY Keeping It Dark 1 ' 1 1 . . ,, ii, Aiin i,-.. . SB rnVr v-i . r a..... ...H -.. -v - sSP I IH V6K.H CONSEKVATlVt ' S3 wn ' CL-'- w- ' ewwMni ANf WH I Merits nr - X JferV uiueru . e. ,..T.Mf 3M I OP THIS TeCle. lit ill Vn.j una MH t ...".' .il O SO-SO. "S .S-?!..9- rm K.D1UE iWrr -T VHOW'5 EVERYTHING W BUS WOBfeiMc: S sywpifATs units will T V" 1 . Ssw ? V v m I cie t. .... t y J& t IHMOT ' 7 - w yKA x& fW j v lW'4 . kv- s x'l. .. zm rT-m 1 UV7 hKV-TXAl" C T I IX I f Y ' iyJiA.. i AavW' I TJA P 3 '"---' '' L',",i -:(.xi ; ' "''"'"n!" ' ' ' ' ."""'Pl'1' ' ' - - , JMBBi;'5i ''' W'A?j ir )A "Vft.lC Tlf t'JiV JJ31 J" f.. ' l ' "T '-' " i i f r"BIPIIP Lunch Postponed BOSS. I SHOULD THIJK -l love, peer DUMB AAIIMALS: Tolerate When a Yeung Lady Could Murder I 1 BH ViPE.V BORFICE " li I AAEAAJ PET j km . inBir v '.Ki . v zrk. aft S -ytT ' ' W& LtT ME. TELL YER ITi5 A SURE S6U I LOVE DUMB AMIAULS IF T STAAID pdr The. people i get aj THIS 9RFIE! AJODUMB AMMAl's AMY DUMBER AA'ME Of? T WaULDfr such juts: this is an ., MOT A PET CHOP - . shop- y Her Small Brether m r iEEf1 VJELL-I'li. SET OUTOFpr; rl This JAJSAAIE A6VLUM Fer Awhile aaiyhew)- m ITS LUA1CH ' "v"- M VJHERE'5 ThEHAT. ) B U--7 THE HAT 7 r S H . r -? By Fontaine Fex SCHOOL DAYS -i l'r GO irpj . iibi lumunm' -?& IpIfPI WlTW &0Kiwi- Tint - f'npyrlclit. 10i'2. by I'ublte l-'dncr Cemrary ss - A-t-HAyi'O'AiPra - ii, ..... r Iflu. CllFB? VICU..W wi ' , veu-a te set yn TABtf, r.rl i.M Can4 Te SBA WHeW GiMwt I C S1 M VfV'Kl"OlNK-J in wml JUe. utHte w&v ue. Te.- IfJ ttnw. vee ie. De'i-v -wtvc e, ct VAffcMT W y -Tt,M ki.-t UOiH, 1M And BeuJkt iwt"""?"g?ggiwqppfwTyiM"y gM- 3.G M I I X.eettms ., t Cj fgft I Fdete. . Y iT(M1M n I iSS9l 1 "fTWPfri HHn'y iBlm'KX BUA w "' ij ON6-A-MINUTG By Sidney fti siiay MUk. :if watahet the urtlas ex that ZanAer uea aa kae pet- ltivcir tea1 fit te hairy Uncle ata. Xa txm her rlghtt She . iheald hr oethcr t of "Ihetc Bci, Ihecc Lips, Ihecc Dec" en the ether 14 e-bc hei4 Oes en, oem en, show her up te B1M7 sal eat our Your with heart throb, Cecil Gerlen. M By II af) ward sw. ttu DWIG ureH"TUUWtL mc te WAxe. we tceiie. tWMtew v TetM W fue tjTm ivm- VeOB. L V jtiU. V v7 ) akaV?l .V. J. 0T 9-' If I PO Vtfi I rMt eu 06HHIMH T0 Tar ns. n HeT FfcOAJj rw wi By C. A. Voight Hu King GLAO WALT DOESN'T jv -- W3t-i& -iarw, II 1 1 -simnni. 1 VIHSHATC5 J -8 l1trf KNOW I WENT AGAINST MIS ADVICE some or tmat OIL STOCK 1 m i ?iM ..U. II IH i& 1 i. h a fl ilfS - ?s hS m i4i I I mmSaA. MMtMk. . w .0 K I . : .i ..TJiitV. .jvir..!'.' tiu mi . a; .-. vjs; mll 3 W .JLVW 'A .vrki ,, f : L5) ? 'Sl'l'JllIiul X.eaa WW fy iv.jtrj. -" . f. i njniijqMi -r ' m if t i. - i . t - i .. wtu.' .